xref: /dpdk/doc/guides/sample_app_ug/l3_forward.rst (revision bc8e32473cc3978d763a1387eaa8244bcf75e77d)
1..  SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause
2    Copyright(c) 2010-2014 Intel Corporation.
3
4L3 Forwarding Sample Application
5================================
6
7The L3 Forwarding application is a simple example of packet processing using
8DPDK to demonstrate usage of poll and event mode packet I/O mechanism.
9The application performs L3 forwarding.
10
11Overview
12--------
13
14The application demonstrates the use of the hash and LPM libraries in the DPDK
15to implement packet forwarding using poll or event mode PMDs for packet I/O.
16The initialization and run-time paths are very similar to those of the
17:doc:`l2_forward_real_virtual` and :doc:`l2_forward_event`.
18The main difference from the L2 Forwarding sample application is that optionally
19packet can be Rx/Tx from/to eventdev instead of port directly and forwarding
20decision is made based on information read from the input packet.
21
22Eventdev can optionally use S/W or H/W (if supported by platform) scheduler
23implementation for packet I/O based on run time parameters.
24
25The lookup method is either hash-based or LPM-based and is selected at run time. When the selected lookup method is hash-based,
26a hash object is used to emulate the flow classification stage.
27The hash object is used in correlation with a flow table to map each input packet to its flow at runtime.
28
29The hash lookup key is represented by a DiffServ 5-tuple composed of the following fields read from the input packet:
30Source IP Address, Destination IP Address, Protocol, Source Port and Destination Port.
31The ID of the output interface for the input packet is read from the identified flow table entry.
32The set of flows used by the application is statically configured and loaded into the hash at initialization time.
33When the selected lookup method is LPM based, an LPM object is used to emulate the forwarding stage for IPv4 packets.
34The LPM object is used as the routing table to identify the next hop for each input packet at runtime.
35
36The LPM lookup key is represented by the Destination IP Address field read from the input packet.
37The ID of the output interface for the input packet is the next hop returned by the LPM lookup.
38The set of LPM rules used by the application is statically configured and loaded into the LPM object at initialization time.
39
40In the sample application, hash-based forwarding supports IPv4 and IPv6. LPM-based forwarding supports IPv4 only.
41
42Compiling the Application
43-------------------------
44
45To compile the sample application see :doc:`compiling`.
46
47The application is located in the ``l3fwd`` sub-directory.
48
49Running the Application
50-----------------------
51
52The application has a number of command line options::
53
54    ./dpdk-l3fwd [EAL options] -- -p PORTMASK
55                             [-P]
56                             [-E]
57                             [-L]
58                             --config(port,queue,lcore)[,(port,queue,lcore)]
59                             [--eth-dest=X,MM:MM:MM:MM:MM:MM]
60                             [--enable-jumbo [--max-pkt-len PKTLEN]]
61                             [--no-numa]
62                             [--hash-entry-num]
63                             [--ipv6]
64                             [--parse-ptype]
65                             [--per-port-pool]
66                             [--mode]
67                             [--eventq-sched]
68                             [--event-eth-rxqs]
69
70Where,
71
72* ``-p PORTMASK:`` Hexadecimal bitmask of ports to configure
73
74* ``-P:`` Optional, sets all ports to promiscuous mode so that packets are accepted regardless of the packet's Ethernet MAC destination address.
75  Without this option, only packets with the Ethernet MAC destination address set to the Ethernet address of the port are accepted.
76
77* ``-E:`` Optional, enable exact match.
78
79* ``-L:`` Optional, enable longest prefix match.
80
81* ``--config (port,queue,lcore)[,(port,queue,lcore)]:`` Determines which queues from which ports are mapped to which cores.
82
83* ``--eth-dest=X,MM:MM:MM:MM:MM:MM:`` Optional, ethernet destination for port X.
84
85* ``--enable-jumbo:`` Optional, enables jumbo frames.
86
87* ``--max-pkt-len:`` Optional, under the premise of enabling jumbo, maximum packet length in decimal (64-9600).
88
89* ``--no-numa:`` Optional, disables numa awareness.
90
91* ``--hash-entry-num:`` Optional, specifies the hash entry number in hexadecimal to be setup.
92
93* ``--ipv6:`` Optional, set if running ipv6 packets.
94
95* ``--parse-ptype:`` Optional, set to use software to analyze packet type. Without this option, hardware will check the packet type.
96
97* ``--per-port-pool:`` Optional, set to use independent buffer pools per port. Without this option, single buffer pool is used for all ports.
98
99* ``--mode:`` Optional, Packet transfer mode for I/O, poll or eventdev.
100
101* ``--eventq-sched:`` Optional, Event queue synchronization method, Ordered, Atomic or Parallel. Only valid if --mode=eventdev.
102
103* ``--event-eth-rxqs:`` Optional, Number of ethernet RX queues per device. Only valid if --mode=eventdev.
104
105
106For example, consider a dual processor socket platform with 8 physical cores, where cores 0-7 and 16-23 appear on socket 0,
107while cores 8-15 and 24-31 appear on socket 1.
108
109To enable L3 forwarding between two ports, assuming that both ports are in the same socket, using two cores, cores 1 and 2,
110(which are in the same socket too), use the following command:
111
112.. code-block:: console
113
114    ./<build_dir>/examples/dpdk-l3fwd -l 1,2 -n 4 -- -p 0x3 --config="(0,0,1),(1,0,2)"
115
116In this command:
117
118*   The -l option enables cores 1, 2
119
120*   The -p option enables ports 0 and 1
121
122*   The --config option enables one queue on each port and maps each (port,queue) pair to a specific core.
123    The following table shows the mapping in this example:
124
125+----------+-----------+-----------+-------------------------------------+
126| **Port** | **Queue** | **lcore** | **Description**                     |
127|          |           |           |                                     |
128+----------+-----------+-----------+-------------------------------------+
129| 0        | 0         | 1         | Map queue 0 from port 0 to lcore 1. |
130|          |           |           |                                     |
131+----------+-----------+-----------+-------------------------------------+
132| 1        | 0         | 2         | Map queue 0 from port 1 to lcore 2. |
133|          |           |           |                                     |
134+----------+-----------+-----------+-------------------------------------+
135
136To use eventdev mode with sync method **ordered** on above mentioned environment,
137Following is the sample command:
138
139.. code-block:: console
140
141    ./<build_dir>/examples/dpdk-l3fwd -l 0-3 -n 4 -w <event device> -- -p 0x3 --eventq-sched=ordered
142
143or
144
145.. code-block:: console
146
147    ./<build_dir>/examples/dpdk-l3fwd -l 0-3 -n 4 -w <event device> -- -p 0x03 --mode=eventdev --eventq-sched=ordered
148
149In this command:
150
151*   -w option whitelist the event device supported by platform. Way to pass this device may vary based on platform.
152
153*   The --mode option defines PMD to be used for packet I/O.
154
155*   The --eventq-sched option enables synchronization menthod of event queue so that packets will be scheduled accordingly.
156
157If application uses S/W scheduler, it uses following DPDK services:
158
159*   Software scheduler
160*   Rx adapter service function
161*   Tx adapter service function
162
163Application needs service cores to run above mentioned services. Service cores
164must be provided as EAL parameters along with the --vdev=event_sw0 to enable S/W
165scheduler. Following is the sample command:
166
167.. code-block:: console
168
169    ./<build_dir>/examples/dpdk-l3fwd -l 0-7 -s 0xf0000 -n 4 --vdev event_sw0 -- -p 0x3 --mode=eventdev --eventq-sched=ordered
170
171In case of eventdev mode, *--config* option is not used for ethernet port
172configuration. Instead each ethernet port will be configured with mentioned
173setup:
174
175*   Single Rx/Tx queue
176
177*   Each Rx queue will be connected to event queue via Rx adapter.
178
179*   Each Tx queue will be connected via Tx adapter.
180
181Refer to the *DPDK Getting Started Guide* for general information on running applications and
182the Environment Abstraction Layer (EAL) options.
183
184.. _l3_fwd_explanation:
185
186Explanation
187-----------
188
189The following sections provide some explanation of the sample application code. As mentioned in the overview section,
190the initialization and run-time paths are very similar to those of the :doc:`l2_forward_real_virtual` and :doc:`l2_forward_event`.
191The following sections describe aspects that are specific to the L3 Forwarding sample application.
192
193Hash Initialization
194~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
195
196The hash object is created and loaded with the pre-configured entries read from a global array,
197and then generate the expected 5-tuple as key to keep consistence with those of real flow
198for the convenience to execute hash performance test on 4M/8M/16M flows.
199
200.. note::
201
202    The Hash initialization will setup both ipv4 and ipv6 hash table,
203    and populate the either table depending on the value of variable ipv6.
204    To support the hash performance test with up to 8M single direction flows/16M bi-direction flows,
205    populate_ipv4_many_flow_into_table() function will populate the hash table with specified hash table entry number(default 4M).
206
207.. note::
208
209    Value of global variable ipv6 can be specified with --ipv6 in the command line.
210    Value of global variable hash_entry_number,
211    which is used to specify the total hash entry number for all used ports in hash performance test,
212    can be specified with --hash-entry-num VALUE in command line, being its default value 4.
213
214.. code-block:: c
215
216    #if (APP_LOOKUP_METHOD == APP_LOOKUP_EXACT_MATCH)
217
218        static void
219        setup_hash(int socketid)
220        {
221            // ...
222
223            if (hash_entry_number != HASH_ENTRY_NUMBER_DEFAULT) {
224                if (ipv6 == 0) {
225                    /* populate the ipv4 hash */
226                    populate_ipv4_many_flow_into_table(ipv4_l3fwd_lookup_struct[socketid], hash_entry_number);
227                } else {
228                    /* populate the ipv6 hash */
229                    populate_ipv6_many_flow_into_table( ipv6_l3fwd_lookup_struct[socketid], hash_entry_number);
230                }
231            } else
232                if (ipv6 == 0) {
233                    /* populate the ipv4 hash */
234                    populate_ipv4_few_flow_into_table(ipv4_l3fwd_lookup_struct[socketid]);
235                } else {
236                    /* populate the ipv6 hash */
237                    populate_ipv6_few_flow_into_table(ipv6_l3fwd_lookup_struct[socketid]);
238                }
239            }
240        }
241    #endif
242
243LPM Initialization
244~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
245
246The LPM object is created and loaded with the pre-configured entries read from a global array.
247
248.. code-block:: c
249
250    #if (APP_LOOKUP_METHOD == APP_LOOKUP_LPM)
251
252    static void
253    setup_lpm(int socketid)
254    {
255        unsigned i;
256        int ret;
257        char s[64];
258
259        /* create the LPM table */
260
261        snprintf(s, sizeof(s), "IPV4_L3FWD_LPM_%d", socketid);
262
263        ipv4_l3fwd_lookup_struct[socketid] = rte_lpm_create(s, socketid, IPV4_L3FWD_LPM_MAX_RULES, 0);
264
265        if (ipv4_l3fwd_lookup_struct[socketid] == NULL)
266            rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "Unable to create the l3fwd LPM table"
267                " on socket %d\n", socketid);
268
269        /* populate the LPM table */
270
271        for (i = 0; i < IPV4_L3FWD_NUM_ROUTES; i++) {
272            /* skip unused ports */
273
274            if ((1 << ipv4_l3fwd_route_array[i].if_out & enabled_port_mask) == 0)
275                continue;
276
277            ret = rte_lpm_add(ipv4_l3fwd_lookup_struct[socketid], ipv4_l3fwd_route_array[i].ip,
278           	                    ipv4_l3fwd_route_array[i].depth, ipv4_l3fwd_route_array[i].if_out);
279
280            if (ret < 0) {
281                rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "Unable to add entry %u to the "
282                        "l3fwd LPM table on socket %d\n", i, socketid);
283            }
284
285            printf("LPM: Adding route 0x%08x / %d (%d)\n",
286                (unsigned)ipv4_l3fwd_route_array[i].ip, ipv4_l3fwd_route_array[i].depth, ipv4_l3fwd_route_array[i].if_out);
287        }
288    }
289    #endif
290
291Packet Forwarding for Hash-based Lookups
292~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
293
294For each input packet, the packet forwarding operation is done by the l3fwd_simple_forward()
295or simple_ipv4_fwd_4pkts() function for IPv4 packets or the simple_ipv6_fwd_4pkts() function for IPv6 packets.
296The l3fwd_simple_forward() function provides the basic functionality for both IPv4 and IPv6 packet forwarding
297for any number of burst packets received,
298and the packet forwarding decision (that is, the identification of the output interface for the packet)
299for hash-based lookups is done by the  get_ipv4_dst_port() or get_ipv6_dst_port() function.
300The get_ipv4_dst_port() function is shown below:
301
302.. code-block:: c
303
304    static inline uint8_t
305    get_ipv4_dst_port(void *ipv4_hdr, uint16_t portid, lookup_struct_t *ipv4_l3fwd_lookup_struct)
306    {
307        int ret = 0;
308        union ipv4_5tuple_host key;
309
310        ipv4_hdr = (uint8_t *)ipv4_hdr + offsetof(struct rte_ipv4_hdr, time_to_live);
311
312        m128i data = _mm_loadu_si128(( m128i*)(ipv4_hdr));
313
314        /* Get 5 tuple: dst port, src port, dst IP address, src IP address and protocol */
315
316        key.xmm = _mm_and_si128(data, mask0);
317
318        /* Find destination port */
319
320        ret = rte_hash_lookup(ipv4_l3fwd_lookup_struct, (const void *)&key);
321
322        return (uint8_t)((ret < 0)? portid : ipv4_l3fwd_out_if[ret]);
323    }
324
325The get_ipv6_dst_port() function is similar to the get_ipv4_dst_port() function.
326
327The simple_ipv4_fwd_4pkts() and simple_ipv6_fwd_4pkts() function are optimized for continuous 4 valid ipv4 and ipv6 packets,
328they leverage the multiple buffer optimization to boost the performance of forwarding packets with the exact match on hash table.
329The key code snippet of simple_ipv4_fwd_4pkts() is shown below:
330
331.. code-block:: c
332
333    static inline void
334    simple_ipv4_fwd_4pkts(struct rte_mbuf* m[4], uint16_t portid, struct lcore_conf *qconf)
335    {
336        // ...
337
338        data[0] = _mm_loadu_si128(( m128i*)(rte_pktmbuf_mtod(m[0], unsigned char *) + sizeof(struct rte_ether_hdr) + offsetof(struct rte_ipv4_hdr, time_to_live)));
339        data[1] = _mm_loadu_si128(( m128i*)(rte_pktmbuf_mtod(m[1], unsigned char *) + sizeof(struct rte_ether_hdr) + offsetof(struct rte_ipv4_hdr, time_to_live)));
340        data[2] = _mm_loadu_si128(( m128i*)(rte_pktmbuf_mtod(m[2], unsigned char *) + sizeof(struct rte_ether_hdr) + offsetof(struct rte_ipv4_hdr, time_to_live)));
341        data[3] = _mm_loadu_si128(( m128i*)(rte_pktmbuf_mtod(m[3], unsigned char *) + sizeof(struct rte_ether_hdr) + offsetof(struct rte_ipv4_hdr, time_to_live)));
342
343        key[0].xmm = _mm_and_si128(data[0], mask0);
344        key[1].xmm = _mm_and_si128(data[1], mask0);
345        key[2].xmm = _mm_and_si128(data[2], mask0);
346        key[3].xmm = _mm_and_si128(data[3], mask0);
347
348        const void *key_array[4] = {&key[0], &key[1], &key[2],&key[3]};
349
350        rte_hash_lookup_bulk(qconf->ipv4_lookup_struct, &key_array[0], 4, ret);
351
352        dst_port[0] = (ret[0] < 0)? portid:ipv4_l3fwd_out_if[ret[0]];
353        dst_port[1] = (ret[1] < 0)? portid:ipv4_l3fwd_out_if[ret[1]];
354        dst_port[2] = (ret[2] < 0)? portid:ipv4_l3fwd_out_if[ret[2]];
355        dst_port[3] = (ret[3] < 0)? portid:ipv4_l3fwd_out_if[ret[3]];
356
357        // ...
358    }
359
360The simple_ipv6_fwd_4pkts() function is similar to the simple_ipv4_fwd_4pkts() function.
361
362Known issue: IP packets with extensions or IP packets which are not TCP/UDP cannot work well at this mode.
363
364Packet Forwarding for LPM-based Lookups
365~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
366
367For each input packet, the packet forwarding operation is done by the l3fwd_simple_forward() function,
368but the packet forwarding decision (that is, the identification of the output interface for the packet)
369for LPM-based lookups is done by the get_ipv4_dst_port() function below:
370
371.. code-block:: c
372
373    static inline uint16_t
374    get_ipv4_dst_port(struct rte_ipv4_hdr *ipv4_hdr, uint16_t portid, lookup_struct_t *ipv4_l3fwd_lookup_struct)
375    {
376        uint8_t next_hop;
377
378        return ((rte_lpm_lookup(ipv4_l3fwd_lookup_struct, rte_be_to_cpu_32(ipv4_hdr->dst_addr), &next_hop) == 0)? next_hop : portid);
379    }
380
381Eventdev Driver Initialization
382~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
383Eventdev driver initialization is same as L2 forwarding eventdev application.
384Refer :doc:`l2_forward_event` for more details.
385